Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023380 (lethargy)
5,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Idiopathic hyperammonemia (IHA) has been described as a rare complication of intensive chemotherapy, but there is little data regarding its occurrence after bone marrow transplantation (BMT). IHA is defined as elevated plasma ammonia concentrations (> 200 mumol/l) in the absence of significant liver function abnormality. From a 21 year BMT database of 2358 patients, we have identified 12 patients (0.5%) with IHA, ages 19 to 46 years. Diagnoses included ALL (n = 2), AML (n = 4), CLL (n = 1), CML (n = 3) and aplastic anemia (n = 2). Eight received marrow from a matched sibling donor, three from an unrelated donor and one autologous marrow. IHA occurred between 14 and 106 days after transplant (median, 25 days). Most frequently patients presented with symptoms of a metabolic encephalopathy, with lethargy and confusion evolving into unresponsiveness, metabolic coma and in eight cases, seizures. At diagnosis of IHA, liver functions were normal or only modestly abnormal. Ten of the 12 patients died 1 to 9 days (median 3.5 days) after diagnosis of IHA despite treatment with combinations of dialysis and ammonia-trapping therapy. While IHA is a rare complication of BMT, it is associated with a high mortality. Early recognition of the syndrome by measurement of plasma ammonia concentrations in patients with neurological symptoms may improve outcome.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hyperammonemia: a frequently lethal complication of bone marrow transplantation. 880 24

A 4-y-old neutered male German Shepherd Dog was presented with a 3-d duration of lethargy, restlessness, and vomiting. Physical examination revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, pale mucous membranes, systolic heart murmur, dehydration, and fever. Hematologic abnormalities included moderate-to-marked leukocytosis, characterized by neutrophilia with a left shift to progranulocytes and 2% presumptive myeloid blasts, marked anemia that was nonregenerative, and marked thrombocytopenia. Dysplasia was evident in neutrophils and platelets. Bone marrow examination revealed marked myeloid and megakaryocytic hyperplasia with 7% blasts, erythroid hypoplasia, and trilineage dysplasia. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed that bone marrow cells were mostly of neutrophil lineage, with reduced expression of common leukocyte antigens (CD45, CD18) and neutrophil-specific antigen. Bone marrow cells were cytogenetically analyzed for the breakpoint cluster region-Abelson oncogene using multicolor fluorescent in situ hybridization. The genetic aberration was present in 7% of cells, which was a negative result (>10% of cells is considered positive). Euthanasia was elected. Histologic examination showed extensive infiltration of multiple organs by neoplastic myeloid cells, with effacement of lymph node and splenic architecture. The final diagnosis was atypical chronic myeloid leukemia (aCML), an uncommon myeloproliferative disorder with features of myelodysplastic syndromes (dysplasia) and chronic leukemia (neutrophilic leukocytosis with <20% marrow blasts, extramedullary infiltrates). The trilineage dysplasia, lack of monocytosis, and supporting cytogenetics distinguish aCML from CML, chronic neutrophilic leukemia, and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia.
...
PMID:Atypical chronic myeloid leukemia in a German Shepherd Dog. 2820 62